SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion
SciFi and Fantasy Book Challenge
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2023 Read All The Books: A Decade of AtTENding the Shelf

Goal: 7 books. (1/7)
Completed

Currently Reading
n/a
On Deck



(RP1 in tandem with the "372 Pages We'll Never Get Back" podcast episodes)

Light From Uncommon Stars 5⭐️
Spirits Abroad 5⭐️
Aeronaut’s Windlass 4⭐️
I also previously (before 2023) read and enjoyed
Legends & Lattes 4⭐️
Stories of your life and others 4⭐️
So, I've added 5 to my total bookshelf read count and I'm up to 188.


I have seen people rate this book very highly and I can understand why. Understanding why others do that didn't really make it into my doing so as well. The reason is pretty simple really, in spite of the fascinating premise the world-building, and the character development there were times when I wanted to put the book down and walk away. The plot has to be one of the most convoluted I have read in a very long time. For myself, this made it very hard to keep the plot threads straight in my mind and not lose track of who was doing what and why. I am glad I stuck it out the ending is well worth the struggle but I just couldn't bring myself to rate it higher than a three-star. I will be looking at the next one, I just hope it doesn't have the same sort of twisty plot line.

1. Rebecca Roanhorse - Black Sun - Finished 03/05/2023
2.
Ah, the ol' cute fluff with cinnamon rolls to dark fluff with cinnamon rolls switcheroo! haha I'll be curious if this one works better for you!




excellent and interesting read which left me wanting more

Amatka
Spear
Elatsoe
A Half-built Garden
Otherwise, I've read Legends & Lattes and am in the middle of Contact, after which I'll finish Spirits Abroad and Stories of Your Life and Others.

4 down, 1 to go (unless I add another book!).

I'll be knocking off one of the additions later, gonna read Samuel R Delany's Babel 17. gotta get through two books before then though.
Dang Marc, you have definitely found your groove. I'm excited for your thoughts on Babel after all the PKD, it's a different kind of trippy!



— Editing this comment the next day, I’ve raised my rating to 4 stars. I like what was done with the main character across the arc of the story. I think the book is really all about the character, and very much from her point of view. Having said that, the book is full of world-building detail, frequently conveyed by the author in the main character’s conversational tone in the middle of scenes, as she expands on some more or less interesting point that has come up. A couple of times dialogue resumed after two or three pages of this and I had to go back and refresh my memory of what they were talking about. I don’t think this is necessarily a problem, I found the story gripping enough and the “infodumps” didn’t detract from that.

sounds like it was an interesting read.


A somewhat disjointed effort to retell myth cycles in an updated format. it is mostly based on the Bhudda Sam. The book juxtaposes time, with the first chapter in the present and all the others save the last in the past. An interesting piece of storytelling, but one that only does a light bit of world building more or less dropping things in and letting them lie and allowing the reader to determine how things look and what the situations in their being what, and where they are. I am not sure that having more of a background in the myth cycle that is being used here would help or hinder the enjoyment of the book and it is unlikely that I will go to the effort to find out.
A pretty good book, in spite of some of the downfalls of the time period it was written in.


This book was a breath of fresh air. To start with the main character is a Female, admittedly something that has become more prevalent in recent years but still. It is a book based on the interactions of the fae between each other and the humans around them. This is another thing that has become a more dominant theme in recent years. The real change here was the fact that the story focuses on a band and music is the main theme that moves the story along. You don't have to know how to make music on your own since the story rarely touches that much detail in the making but this is a book worthy of the effort to read and in the end, I have to agree with the author, this would make a good movie.



This book was a breath of fresh air. To start with the main character is a Female, admittedly something that has become more preval..."
She wrote another called Falcon that was very good.

It is!!! War for the Oaks.

After the start, I found myself really surprised by how good it was. But starts that leave me a little off-footed aren't to be unexpected so I don't usually let that hold me up. LOL.

Weird the last time I heard a complaint about the phone app was that it didn't display the image. I wrote about the
War for the Oaks, which I enjoyed.

I’m glad you liked War for the Oaks. I read it over 20 years ago, but I remember liking it a lot. All I remember now is the Brownie.

I’m glad you liked War for the Oaks. I read it over 20 years ago, but I remember liking it a lot. All I..."
Yeah, Meg was fun, I need me a Brownie for my house. Would make things so much easier.
If that is the way the app works I might have to start putting the cover image at the end. Might make it easier for those with the ap to see the review. Thanks for the heads up

Paused on babel-17. Empire star was trippy, need to read a more straight forward book, so reading Alexei Panshin's Rite of Pa..."
understandable. I have Babel-17 in my reading rotation and I have to agree it is a bit convoluted. I like it well enough that I have no real desire to put it back on the shelf though.

Story is set in the distant future, humans have spread out to several galaxies, but is in a war with 'the invaders'. Protagonist is a youngish woman who is famous for her poetry, but has other talents in code breaking (before she 'retired' and went to poetry). She is tasked to break a new code called babel-17.
That's all I'll say about it, any more, I feel it would start to add spoilers. You may need to re-read the last 15 or so pages to understand the ending. the first time I read it I missed stuff that made the ending kinda meh. on re-read I was like ooh! I didn't catch that!
Anyhoo, I'm gonna go now and read some short stories from Ursula K Le Guin, and then maybe resume my quest a little later in the year, as I got 6 down, 3 to go!

Some books I find difficult to read due to the author's style. Some I find difficult to read due to the subject matter, and there are those that I find difficult to read due to the fact that I am outside the circle of knowledge that makes up the basis of the story. This was one of the last for me. It is at its core a murder mystery. So that in itself is nothing outside of my familiar reading, this one though is set in an Aztec setting with names and myth backgrounds to match. I know little of these myths and pronouncing words of Aztec origin is a tad beyond my ability, this did make the book a little difficult to read but it didn't stop me from finishing the book or liking the style of the author, but it did prevent full enjoyment of the work, not that changing these factors could have made it any better, I am quite sure that would not be the case.

Over the years I have not found myself drawn to reading this book and even more to watching any of the movies that had been based on it. So when I started this book I had no real thoughts on what to expect other than something to do with Vampires. At first, I found the book to be a tad slow and not much to put a great deal of investment in. I will say that I felt that way pretty much up to the end and then it sort of all fell into place. I am glad that I gave this book a chance but it won't ever be high on my recommendation list.

Ship of Magic


I felt the same about Ship of Magic. It was just okay. I really enjoyed Hobb's Assassin's Apprentice and finished the Farseer Trilogy.

Ditto!


Thanks Diane that's good to know. I was wondering if it got better in the other books.


Ooh that’s a good one. I really liked it, but it does get very dark in places.

I've read
Spear 4⭐️
Fuzzy Nation 4⭐️
A Canticle for Leibowitz 3⭐️
and retroactively added
Elatsoe 4⭐️
So, I'm up to 192 shelf reads.
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Gonna take a small break before I get to my next book on this list, PK Dick's A Scanner Darkly, starting to work my way through Samuel R Delany's Einstein Intersection